Yámana lifeways were shaped by the rhythm of the sea. Small bands moved along channels and bays, exploiting shellfish, fish, marine mammals and seabirds. Archaeological sites—many recorded around Wulaia Bay and other Beagle Channel coves—preserve dense shell middens, flaked stone tools, bone implements, and hearths that speak to repeated seasonal occupation.
Material evidence indicates lightweight housing and technologies adapted to wind and wet conditions: skin-covered boats, portable gear, and clothing designed for frequent immersion. Ethnohistoric observers described intricate social networks, flexible camp composition, and strong maritime knowledge, including boat-building and navigation. The archaeological record corroborates a pattern of small, mobile group organization optimized for coastal resource procurement and intergroup exchange.
By the historic interval represented in these DNA samples (16th–20th centuries CE), Yámana communities were experiencing disruptions — new trade goods, introduced diseases, and missionary settlements altered settlement density and mobility. Midden stratigraphy and artifact assemblages from Almanza and nearby sites show both continuity of coastal exploitation and the signatures of rapid cultural change in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.